Fantasy owners of Mike Moustakas should be encouraged with their third baseman being acquired by the Brewers late Friday night.

Miller Park in Milwaukee ranks eighth in the majors for yielding home runs, a big jump from Kansas City’s Kaufmann Stadium, which sits 22nd. However, for a pull hitter such as Moose, it’s best to wait and see. The right-field foul pole at Miller Park is 345 feet away, 15 feet farther than in K.C.

Where he will notice a difference is where the fences fan out toward centre. Miller Park is only 374 in right-centre, compared to 387 at Kaufmann. So, if Moustakas can take advantage of those dimensions, he should see a bump in homer production. At worst, he joins a far superior batting order — he’s slated to hit sixth — offering much higher RBI potential.

The fallout from this trade will see 3B Travis Shaw slide over to try and man second base (he’s never played there before), ending Brad Miller’s short-lived run as an everyday Brewer. Adding middle infield eligibility will now give Shaw a major fantasy boost.

In K.C., still slumping SS Alcides Escobar may take over Moustakas’ 3B spot with Adalberto Mondesi finally getting an extended look at short.

♦ NL-only owners who missed out on Manny Machado, can vie for a nice consolation prize in infielder Eduardo Escobar who was dealt by the Twins to Arizona. Escobar, with 15 HRs, a .274 AVG and leads the majors in doubles, will likely slot in right away at third for the injured Jake Lamb.

♦ Yet another SS on the move is Asdrubal Cabrera, who moves from the Mets to the Phillies and, we suspect, J.P. Crawford owners should be a little worried.

♦ Martin Maldonado’s trade from Anaheim to Houston should lift his value a little. A right-handed bat with five HRs this season, the catcher could see his paltry 6.8% HR/FB mark increase lifting fly balls toward that short porch in left field at Minute Maid.

♦ And two more closers — Zach Britton and Joakim Soria — bite the dust, likely leaving their owners scrambling for save opportunities. Britton, who’d only recently regained his ninth-inning status on the Orioles after missing the first 10 weeks on the DL, is now part of an absurdly deep Yankees relief corps that includes Dellin Betances and David Robertson. That’s four closers in one bullpen. Soria, meanwhile, is buried behind Corey Knebel and Josh Hader on the depth chart in Milwaukee.

♦ Brad Brach, who filled in for Britton the first 2 1/2 months with 11 saves, returns to that role now, though his opportunity for saves, on statistically the worst team in baseball playing in its toughest division, will be limited. Jace Fry likely inherits the Chisox gig, a path made clearer last weekend when Nate Jones suffered a setback in his triple-A rehab assignment and was shut down. Fry owns a nice 11.0 K/9 and has settled back down after a horrid four-game stretch in early July that saw his ERA balloon to 4.13.

♦ Nathan Eovaldi and his 0.98 WHIP goes from Tampa to Boston where, for now, he’ll slot into the rotation spot made available by Eduardo Rodriguez’s ankle injury. Eovaldi has always had electric stuff but fades dramatically the third time through an order and could find himself in a long relief role when E-Rod returns.

♦ The fantasy stock of SPs J.A. Happ (to the Yankees) and Cole Hamels (to the Cubs) won’t be outwardly affected, except that the wins should pile up a little quicker. Hamels should also give up fewer HRs getting out of Arlington. It’s who replaces them in Toronto and Texas, respectively, that bears watching. The Jays will mix and match until Aaron Sanchez and Marco Estrada (if he’s not traded, as well) return as both Ryan Borucki and Sam Gaviglio have earned the right to finish the season in the rotation. In Texas, the SP cupboard is bare with none of their four remaining pieces sporting ERAs under 4.80. There’s also little at triple-A, and young Yohander Mendez, currently back in double-A, could wind up as their ace by the time the season closes.

♦ Reds’ Eugenio Suarez’s last five hits have all been home runs. He and Orioles’ Jonathan Schoop carried matching five-game homer streaks into Saturday.

WAIVER WATCH: With fantasy rating out of 5

Daniel Poncedeleon Austin Gomber SP, Cardinals * * Produced back-to-back six-plus-inning no-hitters against the Reds in their MLB debuts earlier this week. Poncedeleon was then sent back to triple-A but recalled on Friday to work out of the pen. Gomber was kept around in case Carlos Martinez wasn’t ready to come off the DL on Monday as scheduled, but for now is still up. So, if you can grab only one of the two rookies on the waiver wire, which one? Tough call. Both had 10.1 K/9s in triple-A. Both threw 64% of their pitches for strikes in their debuts. Neither was around for the win. DPD was pulled after his seven shutout innings while Gomber gave up a two-run HR in the seventh, but it was the latter who actually looked more dominant, striking out seven and walking two. Poncedeleon was three Ks and three BBs, but given the tiny sample size with the Cards, we’ll still give him the slight edge based on a sparkling 2.15 ERA at Louisville. Gomber was 3.42.

Brandon Drury 3B, Blue Jays * * * His fantasy owners got a raw deal when when the Yankees left him on his triple-A rehab indefinitely with the emergence of Miguel Andujar and Gleyber Torres. But Drury has a major-league bat, with a .272 AVG and 29 HRs in his first two full seasons with the D-Backs before being acquired by the Yanks in the off-season to be their everyday 3B, a role he now could assume in Toronto with Josh Donaldson still out. Defence, however, is a red flag, as is his versatility which could see him wind up in a super-utility role.

Aaron Judge’s fractured wrist will keep him out for a couple of weeks with the hopes that this won’t be a lingering issue for a guy who swings as hard as he does … Gary Sanchez’s groin injury will keep him out most of August … Yoenis Cespedes owners can safely cut bait. He is done for the year, requiring surgery on both of his heels … Jesse Winker (shoulder) is also finished for 2018 … Scott Schebler (shoulder) hopes to be activated this coming week … It’s looking like Eduardo Rodriguez (ankle) may be back sooner than the original September prediction … Yu Darvish (elbow) is still about a month away from returning … Jose Altuve is day-to-day with a sore knee … Justin Turner aggravated his groin injury last Sunday and is out indefinitely … Lorenzo Cain is also dealing with a sore groin … Josh Bell was pulled from Friday’s game with soreness in his left side … Starling Marte is out with a bothersome hand … James Paxton (back) didn’t make his Tuesday start as planned, but looks good to start on Monday … Brandon Belt has a bruised left knee.

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